I seem to be in an odd situation based on what the target market seems to be for 1-8x magnification scopes. I get the feeling I'm about 5% or less of 1-8x shoppers looking to use it on a .308. Everyone with a ballistic drop reticle gears it toward 5.56, and I can understand why, but that bothers me to use a 5.56 reticle on a .308, even though it could be learned around and made to work.
My thoughts, and thus my dilemma:
1. I'd prefer ffp, and a non-ballistic drop reticle.
2. I'd like it to be on the lighter weight side of the scopes in this class.
3. My budget is a little tight given what some of these scopes can run, I'd like to stay under $1200.
4. Intended use is fun, the odd western hunt (where this rifle's energy limits me to 250-300 yards max on bigger game), and rifle classes where the glass need only be good enough to get me to a paper torso target at 600-800 yards max.
5. I've read reviews on Trijicon, Eotech, Burris, NF NX8, Primary Arms and anything else I think may compete (Crimson Trace is entering the market soon also) until my eyes blur, and you get lost in the quagmire of minor details that bother you enough to create hesitation no matter which you think you might choose. (I realize my hopeful budget doesn't allow for some of those.)
6. Speaking of budget, you can see my intended use. This rifle doesn't get depended on in life or death situations theoretically (Red Dawn could happen am I right?), but being a Patriot Ordnance and one of my nicer rifles, I don't see how I can put a low end scope on it and be content (my personal problem). Having said that, what budget do I need to be at, in your opinion? Repeatable, consistent, durable, medium to good glass are all important, but I don't need to be at the super expensive levels to achieve my goals with this scope. Just seems like somewhere in that $1200 range might land me in the sweet spot of good enough, yet not so cheap I regret the purchase later. You are talking to a guy who so far has prairie dog hunted, deer hunted, and target shot at ranges up to 450 yards, with 300-600 dollar Leupolds and Nikons and been reasonably satisfied, for perspective as to my wants/needs.
Sorry, I ramble, but it is time to let rubber hit the road and stop deliberating this decision. Thank you for advice, info, direction, or constructive jabs at my overthinking a simple purchase. Thank you.
My thoughts, and thus my dilemma:
1. I'd prefer ffp, and a non-ballistic drop reticle.
2. I'd like it to be on the lighter weight side of the scopes in this class.
3. My budget is a little tight given what some of these scopes can run, I'd like to stay under $1200.
4. Intended use is fun, the odd western hunt (where this rifle's energy limits me to 250-300 yards max on bigger game), and rifle classes where the glass need only be good enough to get me to a paper torso target at 600-800 yards max.
5. I've read reviews on Trijicon, Eotech, Burris, NF NX8, Primary Arms and anything else I think may compete (Crimson Trace is entering the market soon also) until my eyes blur, and you get lost in the quagmire of minor details that bother you enough to create hesitation no matter which you think you might choose. (I realize my hopeful budget doesn't allow for some of those.)
6. Speaking of budget, you can see my intended use. This rifle doesn't get depended on in life or death situations theoretically (Red Dawn could happen am I right?), but being a Patriot Ordnance and one of my nicer rifles, I don't see how I can put a low end scope on it and be content (my personal problem). Having said that, what budget do I need to be at, in your opinion? Repeatable, consistent, durable, medium to good glass are all important, but I don't need to be at the super expensive levels to achieve my goals with this scope. Just seems like somewhere in that $1200 range might land me in the sweet spot of good enough, yet not so cheap I regret the purchase later. You are talking to a guy who so far has prairie dog hunted, deer hunted, and target shot at ranges up to 450 yards, with 300-600 dollar Leupolds and Nikons and been reasonably satisfied, for perspective as to my wants/needs.
Sorry, I ramble, but it is time to let rubber hit the road and stop deliberating this decision. Thank you for advice, info, direction, or constructive jabs at my overthinking a simple purchase. Thank you.